As consumers grow accustomed to instant digital interactions in nearly every aspect of their lives, the timing of when money arrives is no longer a back-office detail. It is a visible signal of reliability, trust and financial control. Disbursement speed is now a defining factor in the modern payment experience.
“Money Mobility: Who Gets Paid Fast and Who Waits,” a collaboration between PYMNTS Intelligence and Ingo Payments, examines who benefits from fast payouts, who is still waiting days to receive funds and why these differences matter more than ever.
The research reveals a clear stratification in payout speed.Roughly 30% of consumers receive funds instantly or near-instantly. One in four still waits three days or more.Consumers under financial pressure—such as paycheck-to-paycheck households and those who rely on disbursements as their primary source of income—adopt faster payment methods more quickly. Financially pleasant and older consumers are more likely to rely on slower rails, even when faster options are available.
There is a clear connection between disbursement speed and consumer satisfaction. Consumers who receive funds quickly are far more likely to report positive experiences, while slow payments consistently undermine confidence. The type of payout also plays a critical role.Tips, contractor payments and winnings tend to arrive fastest, reflecting both urgency and willingness to adopt instant options. Refunds and rebates remain among the slowest payouts, highlighting how motivation and perceived importance influence payment choices.
Together,the findings reveal a growing gap between expectations and reality. As instant payments become more common, slow disbursements stand out sharply and risk damaging trust. for banks, FinTechs and payment providers, the ability to deliver fast, predictable payouts is now a competitive differentiator with real implications for loyalty and financial well-being.
In “Money Mobility: Who Gets Paid Fast and Who Waits,” learn how:
- Consumer urgency reshapes payment behavior. Financial pressure and reliance on disbursements dramatically increase adoption of instant and same-day options, changing how consumers choose and value payout methods.